Carys is propped up against some railings, four nightclub bouncers
buzzing around her. In fact, if her sheer black outfit had just a few touches
of yellow she’d make an excellent queen bee, surrounded by a swarm of close-eyed
drones. They certainly seem to venerate her. Two of them stand either side
keeping her upright, passing her cigarettes, lighting them; keeping her warm,
whilst the other two make phone calls, control the traffic and finally wave us
in.
‘Someone spiked Carys’ drink,’ says the bouncer who meets us, whether
on the verge of tears or extreme violence it’s hard to tell. ‘She’s lost the
use of her legs.’
If her drink has been spiked, it’s had a focused effect. She doesn’t
slur her words, has a good recall of events, isn’t dizzy or nauseated. It’s
just that she has no feeling at all from mid-thigh downwards, and although she
can weight bear, she has to be guided onto the trolley we bring alongside her.
‘It was that last Sambuca’ she says, quite clearly and calmly. ‘You’d
never know if there was something weird in that shit or not, would you?’
‘Who gave it to you?’
‘I don’t know. Some guy.’
She shrugs, phlegmatic about the whole affair. When we’ve made her
comfortable on the stretcher she takes a kiss and a hug from each of the
bouncers, then waves to them with one of her shoes as she slowly rises into the
air on the tail lift.
‘I used to work there’ she says as we push her inside.
* * *
At the hospital the triage area is as busy as ever. Carys surveys the
scene coolly, her arms folded.
‘This is stupid,’ she says. ‘I feel such an idiot.’
‘We’ve got to get this problem with your legs sorted out, though. I wonder
if your drink was spiked? Where’s my
biro...?’
‘What you want a biro for? Shove it up me arse?’
‘No! I’m going to test your reflexes.’
I run it up and down the soles of her feet, but the plantar reflex
is lacking.
‘I’m normally pretty ticklish,’ she says, looking gloomily at her
inert feet.
A man in a blue coat wanders over. Out of the corner of my eye he
looks like a nurse, but when I turn round to give him a handover, I see that he’s
actually a member of the public. An elderly black man, with tightly curled,
greying hair and a pair of bi-focals perched on the tip of his nose. He smiles,
lowers his chin, and regards Carys over the top of them.
‘Well, well!’ he says. ‘And where are you from my dear?’
‘Where am I from? Where are you
from, lover?’
‘Oh – hush!’ he chuckles. ‘Listen. I couldn’t help overhearing you
say the word biro. A very unusual
pronunciation.’
‘Is it? Biro. How else do you say it?’
‘There you are again, you see? Now, forgive me for saying so – but am
I right in thinking you’re from Africa?’
‘Africa? What? No, mate. Cardiff.’
‘Ah! Cardiff!’ he says, smiling broadly, as if he’d just been proved
right. ‘Ye-es. Bi-ro. A most unusual word. Laszlo Biro. Hungarian, I believe.
‘Was he?’
‘Yes. Yes he was. Unmistakable.’
‘Oh-kay then.’
He wanders away, cleaning his glasses on his coat and shaking his
head.
‘Fucking hell,’ says Carys. ‘That’s given me the fear, that has. I need
a hug, quick.’
She turns to me, but I shake my head.
‘If you don’t mind Carys I’ll leave that to the nurse,’ I say. ‘When
we can find a real one.’
And I put the biro
back in my pocket.
8 comments:
Bea/Carys?
I wonder how much havoc someone could cause impersonating a nurse in a busy A&E?
Well, that whole thing was… odd.
What's a biro?
Good call Spence. No hugs for pretend fears. Strange, she didn't seem like the type who fishes for attention.
tpals - Oops! Good call - I changed the name half way through! *blushes*
There have been some instances, though not round here as far as I know. Wasn't there someone who pretended to be a doctor for a few years?
Cass - Very odd. A biro's a cheap plastic pen. You'd know it if you saw it.
TV - I tend not to hug the patients. 'A handshake is as good as a hug'.
Biros are called Bic pens in the US. A guy with the last name of Bich licensed the pen from Biro. Called it Bic because that's how his name sounded.
I've heard it called a Bic Biro before - interesting! I've got a feeling they were the first disposable pens (after years of fountain pens you had to fill from a pot &c)
It was all going so well,but that last bit made me think of a Carry On film.
Carry On Biro?
Come to think of it, the guy in the blue coat did look a bit like Sid James - ya'hah hah hah.
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